Price Level Comparison
Compare one consumer price category across OECD economies using the United States benchmark of 100.
38 economies · 8 categories · 2022–2024
Tool Controls
United States = 100
Missing values are shown as -
Price Level Results
| 100 | 0.0 | |
| 99.9 | −0.1 | |
| 94.5 | −5.5 | |
| 86.9 | −13.1 | |
| 84.4 | −15.6 | |
| 83.3 | −16.7 | |
| 80.6 | −19.4 | |
| 77.1 | −22.9 | |
| 75.4 | −24.6 | |
| 72.1 | −27.9 | |
| 71.4 | −28.6 | |
| 67 | −33.0 | |
| 64 | −36.0 | |
| 62.7 | −37.3 | |
| 62.2 | −37.8 | |
| 60.8 | −39.2 | |
| 52.8 | −47.2 | |
| 52.8 | −47.2 | |
| 50.7 | −49.3 | |
| 46.5 | −53.5 | |
| 46 | −54.0 | |
| 45.6 | −54.4 | |
| 43.4 | −56.6 | |
| 42.7 | −57.3 | |
| 41.4 | −58.6 | |
| 39.5 | −60.5 | |
| 38.1 | −61.9 | |
| 37 | −63.0 | |
| 33.9 | −66.1 | |
| 33.4 | −66.6 | |
| 31 | −69.0 | |
| 30.7 | −69.3 | |
| 29.3 | −70.7 | |
| 25.8 | −74.2 | |
| 25.3 | −74.7 | |
| 19.2 | −80.8 | |
| 18.6 | −81.4 | |
| 14.5 | −85.5 |
United States100
Iceland99.9
Switzerland94.5
Australia86.9
Ireland84.4
Israel83.3
Norway80.6
Luxembourg77.1
Finland75.4
United Kingdom72.1
Sweden71.4
Costa Rica67
Denmark64
Austria62.7
Canada62.2
Netherlands60.8
Belgium52.8
Italy52.8
Germany50.7
Slovenia46.5
Mexico46
New Zealand45.6
France43.4
Spain42.7
Estonia41.4
Portugal39.5
Greece38.1
South Korea37
Japan33.9
Slovakia33.4
Latvia31
Lithuania30.7
Poland29.3
Chile25.8
Czechia25.3
Hungary19.2
Colombia18.6
Türkiye14.5
Category Summary
Health price levels vary widely across the 38 OECD economies that report data for 2024, measured against the United States benchmark of 100. United States has the highest level at 100, 0.0 index points above the benchmark, followed by Iceland (99.9), Switzerland (94.5). The lowest is Türkiye at 14.5, −85.5 index points from the benchmark, with Colombia (18.6), Hungary (19.2) close behind. United States (100) and Iceland (99.9) sit close to the United States benchmark, within a few index points either side of 100. The median level among these economies is about 48.6, below the United States benchmark. 3 of the 38 economies with data sit within 10 index points of the benchmark in either direction. The largest single difference from the benchmark is about −85.5 index points, recorded by Türkiye. Across the group, the spread between the highest and lowest reported levels is about 85.5 index points. 0 of the 38 economies with data report a level above the United States benchmark, and 38 report a level below it.
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How to Read the Index
A value of 100 means a price level identical to the United States benchmark. A value of 120 means prices are about 20 index points above the United States benchmark; a value of 85 means prices are about 15 index points below it.
These are relative price level indices, not U.S. dollar amounts and not a measure of how fast prices are rising over time. They do not represent what a household actually spends, and a higher or lower index does not mean every individual good in that category is priced identically across countries — the index reflects the category as a whole, not any single item within it.